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Cast
and Credits
Roger Donaldson (Director)
Al Pacino (Walter Burke)
Colin Farrell (James Clayton)
Bridget Moynahan (Layla)
Gabriel Macht (Zack)
Kenneth Mitchell (Alan)
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the official website of The Recruit
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The
secret world of espionage has become increasingly more prevalent
in recent times, as national security is forced to depend
further and further upon intelligence gathered by field
operatives. Many people know the various agencies are there, but
few know how agents are selected, trained, and utilized in the
protection of a nation, and that the intelligence they gather
often determines a nations course and actions.
In the new film “The
Recruit” director Roger Donaldson takes the audiences inside
the secret world of the CIA by showing the process of a
young agents recruitment and training. Veteran star Al Pacino
plays Walter Burke, a top CIA operative who is charged with
recruiting and training the best minds and bodies in America to
become operatives. Burke has set his sights upon James Clayton
(Colin Farrell), a top computer grad and orphan who
after his fathers mysterious death years ago is looking
for answers. Burke entices James to join
by promising a life far more exciting than what the
computer companies are offering him, and by his insistence that
being a “scary judge of talent”, he knows a sure operative
when he sees one.
Before long, James and his fellow recruits are in testing
and those that pass find themselves on a secret location known
as “The Farm” where they are to be trained into operatives.
While in training, James meets a fellow recruit named Layla
(Bridget Moynahan), and while there is a spark, there is also
some tension between the two. The next part of the film revolves
around various aspects of training and eventually leads to James
being selected to root out a traitor in their midst. At first
James does not know whom to believe but suddenly he like his
fellow recruits is locked in a serious situation where the
advice given in training that “nothing is as it seems” has
never been more evident.
I will refrain from giving away more of the plot as while
some areas are predictable; the story does have some nice twists
and turns along the way. The chemistry between Farrell and
Moynahan is good as is the solid work done by Pacino. There is a
hardness about Pacino’s portrayal of Burke that is softened by
some of the truths he lets slip as we learn that people close to
him at times had to be sacrificed for the good of the nation,
and that his is a lonely life of shadows and secrets.
My only real complaint with the film is that I found the
ending to be to much Hollywood, and not enough in keeping with
the story, things seemed to be tidied up at the films end, and I
did not expect the line between good and bad to be drawn as
sharply as it was, as a major part of the film dealt with the
ambiguity that enshrouded many of the characters, and that some
sub elements of the film were glossed over, or completely
forgotten by the films end.
All in all not a bad film, it just left me wanting
more.
-- Gareth
Von Kallenbach (
3 1/2 pops out of 4 pops )
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about this film with other Popkorn Junkies |
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Other Junkie's
opinions.....
Billy Ray ( 1/2 out
of 4 pops )
Let's
see--how many times do we have to watch this same redundant old
storyline, over and over again, with different actors each time.
"The Recruit" treads no new ground and really offers no
entertainment, other than getting to look at Colin Farrell for a couple
of hours. Al Pacino is downright disappointing, and why not
considering he acts like his character from "The Devil's
Advocate". I was expecting something different--something
fresh, but was slapped with the same old, same old. Whatever you
do, don't get recruited to see this big disappointment.
Matt ( 2 out of 4
pops )
The first half of the movie got me pretty bored. It mostly
consists of Colin Farrell's character going through his training as a
CIA agent. Afterwards, the movie starts to pick up the pace.
The ending is confusing, and I'm still trying to figure it out, but it
kept me at the edge of my seat and contains a neat twist. But all
in all, "The Recruit" left me kind of dry. Al Pacino
seems right at home with his role, delivering a brilliant-as-always
performance. Bridget Moynahan, of "Coyote Ugly" and
"The Sum of All Fears" fame, is definitely one of the most
strikingly beautiful up-and-coming actresses. She provided
more-than-sufficent eye candy. The one I had a problem with was
Colin Farrell. He's a good actor and pulled off the American
accent almost perfectly in "American Outlaws" and
"Minority Report." Maybe it's harder to have me believe
him as an American, since I've seen him in many interviews
bantering away in his thick Irish accent, but in "The Recruit"
I caught his accent slipping about 95 percent of the time! There's
even a scene where he yells, "Everything is a test!" No,
that's not a spelling error. He didn't pronounce the
"h." If I were him, I'd definitely hire a new dialogue
coach. I just couldn't get over his horrible accent throughout the
film, and that's part of what ruined the experience for me. Unless
you're going to hire a foreign actor like Brian Cox or Gary Oldman who
can pull off the American accent without the scratch, just hire a damn
American! I'd better recommend this movie as a rental, so that way
you can drift off to the kitchen and fix yourself something to eat
during the first half and strap yourself in for the second.
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